Soil application of activated hydrochar derived from sewage sludge enhances plant growth and reduces nitrogen loss.

Sci Total Environ

Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Sde Boker campus, Midreshet Ben Gurion 8499000, Israel. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

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Article Abstract

Sewage sludge treatment and disposal is a considerable environmental and economic burden, and is considered a major global challenge. Here, sewage sludge treatment and disposal were studied with a focus on hydrothermal carbonization and the use of hydrochar (HC) as a soil amendment after Fenton-reaction activation. The underlying hypothesis was that enhanced adsorption of nutrients (e.g., ammonium) by activated HC (AHC) increases their availability, thus enhancing plant growth and reducing environmental impacts such as greenhouse gas emission and N leaching relative to conventional soil-amendment techniques. The impact of AHC on lettuce plant growth, N leaching, ammonia volatilization, soil trace-gas emissions, and respiration was studied in a net-house planting experiment. Four treatments were tested in quadruplicate using sandy loam soil with addition of either AHC, urea fertilizer, or AHC plus urea, and a control with no amendment. Activation-induced changes in AHC surface properties (indicated by SEM and XPS analyses) resulted in an NH adsorption capacity 60 % higher than that of untreated HC. The AHC + urea soil treatment yielded the most enhanced plant growth, followed by urea and AHC treatments with comparable growth rates. Least growth occurred in the control with no amendment. Nitrogen loss through gas emissions, per kg of lettuce, was lowest with AHC + urea treatment, although its mean N emission as nitrous oxide (NO) was notably higher at 2.3 mg NO-N kg than for other treatments (∼0.4 mg NO-N kg). Dissolved-N leaching was reduced by up to four times with AHC treatment due to its higher NH adsorption capacity, indicating reduced environmental impact of the AHC amendment. AHC application is therefore considered a sustainable soil amendment, enhancing plant growth and reducing N loss and sewage environmental impact.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174965DOI Listing

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